Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 10, No. 2 - July, 1937
The Geology of Union Peak
By Carl E. Dutton, Ranger Naturalist
Union Peak is the most conspicuous
topographic feature in the southwestern portion of the park, its summit
being 7698 feet above sea level and over 1000 feet above the general
level of the adjacent area. The upper 800 feet of the peak stands as a
rock spire above a ridge-like base which is the drainage divide between
Union Creek to the north and Red Blanket Creek to the south, both
streams being tributaries of the Rogue River. Union Peak is visible from
many parts of the park. From almost any viewpoint it is symmetrical in
outline, being somewhat like an inverted "U". The summit of the peak is
a ridge 50 feet long from east to west and about 15 feet wide from north
to south. A sketch of a view of Union Peak appears on the cover of this
issue of Nature Notes.
The relatively simple structure of
Union Peak is the key to its geology. The spire of the peak consists of
a gray igneous rock the minerals of which are too small to be recognized
without magnification. This central rock mass has been broken into
blocks by systems of fractures which probably formed as the mass
solidified and cooled. There are relatively few blocks even closely
resembling the typical six-sided columns which usually form as hot
igneous masses cool and contract. There is general radial arrangement of
the planes of fracture in the spire-like mass of the peak.
Although most of the spire is composed
of the fine grained gray rock, on the eastern side near the summit there
is an area or mass of very different material. The material is dark dray
to black. It consists of fragments of various sizes arranged in poorly
defined layers whose inclination is toward the west, that is, toward the
central portion of the peak.
Structures exposed around the base of
the peak are also significant. At the eastern side of the peak there is
an area in which a layered arrangement of material is also evident.
These layers are composed of numerous angular fragments, varying widely
in size, and a great proportion of very fine material. The layers are
inclined steeply toward the east.
At the western base of the peak layered
material is exposed. Those layers, the top and bottom of each being
irregular and rough, do not show any fragmental characteristics. The
inner portion of each layer is composed of rather uniformly fine
grained, dark gray to black rock.
Union Peak is described in Professional
Paper No. 3 as being of volcanic origin.* The description states that
the spire or central portion of the peak represents lava which rose and
solidified in the vent of a volcano. Such a conclusion must have been
based on the exposed structures, described above. The layered fragmental
material at the eastern base of the peak is a portion of the cone having
been removed by erosion. The material at the western base of the peak
represents a portion of the cone which was built by successive
outpourings of lava flows.
The black cindery material near the
summit of the peak represents an interesting relationship. The usual
inclination of layers in a volcanic cone is outward from the center;
however, in the mass near the summit the inclination is toward the
center. Because of this relationship to the central spire the mass of
cindery material may represent explosive fragments which fell on the
inward facing slope within the crater of the cone, the inclination of
layers having been controlled by the slope of the wall of the crater.
The structure visible at Union Peak
indicate that it was a center of volcanic activity. The present physical
features of the peak are the result of processes which acted since the
cone was built by volcanic activity. Glaciers and running water are in
part at least responsible for the partial destruction of the former cone
which may have stood at an elevation somewhat higher than the present
peak.
Just north of the peak there are
several broad flat valleys. These are obviously of glacial origin.
Valleys of similar origin exist to the south and west of the peak. It
has been shown that Union Peak is a remnant of a once larger cone. The
fact that the lower slopes show evidence of glaciation also indicates
that the peak was at one time sufficiently large to permit a heavy
accumulation of snow which fed the glaciers on the slopes of the peak,
glacial action having cut the U-shaped valleys to the north, south, and
west. The isolated position and the spire-like character of the
remaining portion of the cone is perhaps a measure of the extent to
which material was removed by glaciation. The materials composing the
cone would be much more easily eroded than the solid mass of rock which
filled the central vent of the cone. By repeated glaciation the material
of the cone was evidently stripped away from the "plug".
Union Peak is also of interest because
of several detailed features. The blocks of rock in the talus on the
southeastern and southwestern sides contain in abundance a mineral whose
chemical composition is identical to that of quartz, but whose physical
properties are sufficiently different that this variety is designated as
cristobalite. This mineral was first discovered in Mexico and has since
been found at relatively few places in the world. It is thus rather
surprising to find the mineral in such abundance at Union Peak. Although
the crystals are seldom more than 1mm in their greatest dimension, they
are well formed double-ended four-sided pyramids. The crystals formed as
coatings in the cavities of the rock, evidently having been deposited
from solution which filled or passed through the cavities.
Blobs of glass occur on fragments of
rock at the summit of the peak. The glass is present on some fragments
which are apparently the result of residual disintegration, and also
present on fragments at the top of a crudely built "monument". The
blisters of glass are distinctly surficial phenomena. The only logical
explanation seems to be that fusion has been produced by strokes of
lightning hitting the peak.
*Diller, J. S. and Patton, H. S., The
Geology and Petrography of Crater Lake National Park, U. S. Geol.
Sur. Prof. Paper 3, P. 20, 1902.